AWS Weekly Roundup: AWS re:Invent keynote recap, on-demand videos, and more (December 8, 2025)

The week after AWS re:Invent builds on the excitement and energy of the event and is a good time to learn more and understand how the recent announcements can help you solve your challenges and unlock new opportunities. As usual, we have you covered with our top announcements of AWS re:Invent 2025 that you can learn all about here.

For me, one moment stood out above all the technical announcements: watching Rafi (Raphael Francis Quisumbing) from the Philippines receive the Now Go Build Award from Werner Vogels. Rafi has been an AWS Hero since 2015 and co-lead of AWS User Group Philippines since 2013. His dedication to building communities and empowering developers across the region embodies what this award represents. You can read more about Rafi on The Kernel. Congrats, Rafi!

The keynote recap: Agents, renaissance, and the developer’s role
This year’s AWS re:Invent keynotes painted a clear picture of where we’re headed.

Matt Garman emphasized that developers are “the heart of AWS” and that “freedom to invent” remains AWS’s core mission after 20 years. He focused on AI agents as the next inflection point: “AI assistants are starting to give way to AI agents that can perform tasks and automate on your behalf. This is where we’re starting to see material business returns from your AI investments.”

Swami Sivasubramanian highlighted the transformative moment we’re in: “For the first time in history, we can describe what we want to accomplish in natural language, and agents generate the plan. They write the code, call the necessary tools, and execute the complete solution.” AWS is building production-ready infrastructure that’s secure, reliable, and scalable—purpose-built for the non-deterministic nature of agents.

Peter DeSantis and Dave Brown reinforced that the core attributes AWS has obsessed over for 20 years—security, availability, performance, elasticity, cost, and agility—are more important than ever in the AI era. Dave Brown showcased Graviton and AWS’s custom silicon innovations that deliver these attributes at scale.

Werner Vogels delivered his final keynote after 14 years, introducing the concept of the “renaissance developer”—someone who is curious, thinks in systems, and communicates effectively. His message about AI and developer evolution resonated: “Will AI take my job? Maybe. Will AI make me obsolete? Absolutely not… if you evolve.” He emphasized that developers must be owners: “The work is yours, not that of the tools. You build it, you own it.”

You can also watch from keynotes, innovation talks to breakout sessions and more in the on-demand video page.

Innovations Talks

Breakout sessions — Topics Breakout sessions — Segments

Last week’s launches
Here are the launches that caught my attention not yet covered in our top announcements of AWS re:Invent 2025 post:

  • Kiro Autonomous Agent – Building on Kiro’s general availability in November with team features, AWS introduced an autonomous agent that maintains awareness across sessions, learns from pull requests and feedback, and handles bug triage and code coverage improvements spanning multiple repositories. “Orders of magnitude more efficient” than first-generation AI coding tools, Matt Garman said. Kiro is now Amazon’s standard AI development environment company-wide.
  • Multimodal Retrieval for Bedrock Knowledge Bases (GA) – Build AI-powered search and question-answering applications that work across text, images, audio, and video files. Developers can now ingest multimodal content with full control of parsing, chunking, embedding, and vector storage options, then send text or image queries to retrieve relevant segments across all media types.
  • AWS Interconnect – Multicloud (Preview) – Quickly establish private, secure, high-speed network connections with dedicated bandwidth and built-in resiliency between Amazon VPCs and other cloud environments. Starting in preview with Google Cloud as the first launch partner, with Microsoft Azure support coming in 2026.

See AWS What’s New for more launch news that I haven’t covered here. That’s all for this week. Check back next Monday for another Weekly Roundup!

Happy building!

Donnie

This post is part of our Weekly Roundup series. Check back each week for a quick roundup of interesting news and announcements from AWS!

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